What's the secret? Hahaha! I'm happy where I am, but I do want to live over there sometime for 10+ years. But I am confused.I sometimes see randomness. Last time I saw a dude that barely spoke English having his paperwork approved, and then saw this businesses man getting rejected. I mean, what's the secret? Oh.I do have a couple of questions as well:What's a green card?What's the difference between having a citizenship and being a resident?Yeah, I think that's about it. Thank you lads.
>>2728908You don't. We're full.
>>2728908If you are a grill, I'll marry you so you can get that green card.
>>2728908>What's a green card?A green card is a Permanent Resident identification document. They entitle someone to live and work in the US forever, and are often the residence type that proceeds naturalization (becoming a citizen). To get one, you almost always have to have been living and working in the US on some other kind of visa (sponsored by an employer, or secured by having an American spouse) for a period of years. >What's the difference between having a citizenship and being a resident?Among other things, green card holders can’t vote or hold elected office, and they can’t easily sponsor family members to immigrate—citizenship is transferrable (kids born abroad to citizen parents are usually eligible to be citizens, residents’ no, etc.). On the plus side, they don’t have to register for the draft, although they can join the army if they want to.Also, despite the fact that it’s called permanent residence, it actually has to be renewed every ten years, and it lapses if you spend eight years outside the US during that decade. Citizenship is almost always truly permanent; it can theoretically be revoked after naturalization if someone gets in a lot of trouble, but it’s rare, and whether it’s legal is debatable.
>>2728985*precedes
>>2728908>I mean, what's the secret?You have to be some shade of brown
>>2729025He's a white incel larper and he got a white incel racist to take the bait. Lmao cheaper than traveling I guess